2-0, who'd a thought?
Two - nil; who’d a thought
Iain O'Brien
25-Feb-2013
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Dan won the toss, again - I just cut and pasted that from my last entry! I keep it on the clipboard to cut and paste in as it seems to be so frequent. We were going to bowl on a deck that looked like it had a little bit in it. There was a match before us on the deck, NZCPA Masters v the ACPA Masters, and I got to watch a little of it on the TV before we headed down to the ground; the pitch did a little but towards the end it flattened out all right. We expected it to do just little so bowling first was always the best option.
Tim [Southee] bowled a great first over and I had the second. For some reason I was a whole lot more nervous at the time than I had been for a long time; a big, noisy home crowd and two destructive batsmen was the recipe that made my heart beat crazily! I tried to make a joke with Jake [Oram] , to maybe lighten the moment. But standing 15 meters away, he couldn’t hear me it was so noisy out there, so that didn’t help.
Right then, relax; remember the plan; see the delivery; smooth bouncy run-up; feel the rhythm; relax the shoulders; jump strong; hold the front arm; release the back shoulder; feel it off the fingertips and hope it don’t go for six.
It didn’t, just a single but ball three and five did race to the fence of Virender Sehwag’s blade for fours. I couldn’t find the lengths I wanted to bowl, that over just didn’t go where it was supposed to go. My next over was better, one run and one wicket from it, and the wicket was Sehwag. I had a quick chat to Baz [McCullum] before this ball. He had come running down with a piece of advice, something we’re asking the senior players to do more of, and, well, the result was handy. Not quite the execution I wanted with the delivery but Sehwag was gone and we’re a happy bunch of boys!
Ian Butler’s start to the bowling crease saw Gautam Gambhir find the middle of his bat but two balls later the danger man from the last match, Suresh Raina, sent a catch Timmy’s way and he obliged. I sprinted as quickly as I could from fine leg to get to the huddle; that was what we needed.
My third over of this spell wasn’t quite right either, good bouncer first up to Yuvraj Singh was followed up with a straight half volley, not the best from me, and he, as he should have, deposited me back over my head for a four. Damn, come on OB, get it right. I finished that over with 1 for 23 off 3, not to bad, but could have been a whole lot better. Got to get my execution right, the plans are right; I just haven’t got the ball in the right areas.
My last over, the 13th of the innings, and Yuvraj is still in and being dangerous. I snuck a dot ball in to start, the next one though went a long way, in fact it only just missed my parents in the crowd; honestly missed them by two rows sailing just over their heads! Another dot ball and then what we were after: not the best delivery of mine but Jake, out on the cover fence, wasn’t going to turn that catch down a metre or so inside the rope. There was just one more run of the over and I finish with 2 for 30 off my four. I’m ‘kinda’ pleased with the figures but not with how I bowled overall. I’ll bowl better and can guarantee you that I’ll go for more; I still have things to work on, but I know what they are and have the opportunity to do so over the next few days.
Dan was very good again and Jesse [Ryder] bowled his four overs for just 18. These two combined meant that we held India to 149; a target we would have been happy with at the start of the match.
Baz, again, was just so special. Jesse and Baz put on 53 for the first wicket in real quick time; Jesse’s six of the first ball of the innings really set the tone for the early chase. When these two boys combine it is one of the most awesome things to watch and with us all watching from the dugout we were constantly up and down off our seats in awe and excitement.
Rossco [Taylor], again (I love using the word ‘again’ in this way, repeating quality performances is one of the big things in our team) was special. Twenty seven off 25 balls in a well-paced innings with only two boundaries. He’s showing great skills as a dangerous boundary hitter and in an innings like this one, the ability to turn over the scoreboard with singles and twos.
Irfan Pathan’s second to last over, the 18th, was as good as it gets at this stage of a game. Five runs and two big wickets turned the game right around on its head. Up until then we were going along very nicely and then all of a sudden things started to get a bit tense in the dugout.
There were then 12 left to win from the last over and Irfan to bowl his fourth; if it’s anything like his last over then we are in trouble. The brothers are out there, Nathan McCullum on strike, single off the first. Single off the second with Baz on strike; really could have done with a boundary there to calm our nerves. Another single followed off the third ball leaves nine needed from three balls and Baz on strike. We’re not out of it yet!
Bang, Baz goes through midwicket, four, we’re all off our seats shouting and clapping. Five off two now and bang, Baz goes to the boundary again, beats the straight fielders to the sightscreen boundary; amazing! One off one, field is up and as if to add tension to the moment Baz swings hard and only just, and I mean only just, clears mid-off for the winning single. Benches cleared, we’re all out of the dugout celebrating. The noise inside the ground was amazing and the noise that we were making was almost as loud.
Last night was the longest time I have ever spent in a changing room, longer than we spent at Perth and I thought that was a late one. There was no way I was going to be on the early bus, I wanted to enjoy this for as long as possible. We got back to the hotel, I had a quick shower and put on my favourite Illicit t-shirt and headed out with the guys for a couple. The town was packed; it was as everyone from the ground had piled into the one bar. What an atmosphere, I don’t know how many handshakes and pats on the back I got last night, certainly more than I’ve ever had. Thank you all for being so friendly, great night!
Up and off to the gym this morning, a little bit tough to drag myself out of bed, but it had to be done and I feel pretty good for it. We have the rest of the day off before training tomorrow morning here in Wellington and then head up to Napier to prepare for the ODI series. I always look forward to getting to Napier; a) I love the place and, b) I get to catch up with my best mate and his fantastic family. Catch you soon DNWO!
I support the New Zealand Foundation of the Blind as a charity; I’ve got two auctions going from now that the foundation will prosper from, so please bid and bid large. One is my signed shirt from this Twenty20 series and the other auction is Brendon McCullum’s Man-of-the-Match medal from last night’s match-winning knock. Brendon will sign the back of it before I send it and I will send a photo with it of McCullum signing it as proof of authenticity.
Fast bowler Iain O'Brien played 22 Tests for New Zealand in the second half of the 2000s